Aaron Rodgers has joined the founding team of a startup building a centralized database and credentialing platform for professional athletes, modeled on IMDb's entertainment infrastructure. The company — not yet named publicly — secured seed funding at a $40M post-money valuation, with Rodgers taking an equity stake alongside venture firms including Founders Fund and Sapphire Sport, according to three people familiar with the term sheet. The platform aims to consolidate career statistics, contract histories, endorsement portfolios, and verified contact channels for agents and brand partners across major leagues.
The product solves a specific pain point: today, a Nike brand manager chasing endorsement candidates for a $2M campaign typically pulls data from five sources — team media guides, LinkedIn guesses, agent databases locked behind CRM paywalls, unofficial Twitter accounts, and manual Google searches. The startup's pitch is a single API that returns verified athlete profiles, representation details, and deal availability in real time. Early beta users include two Top 10 sports agencies and one Fortune 50 apparel brand testing bulk lookups for 500+ athlete targets per quarter. Rodgers will serve as an advisor and provide athlete recruiting leverage; his agent, working through CAA Sports, is already circulating demo invitations to 80 NFL clients.
The timing matters because athlete-marketing spend hit $30B globally in 2024, up 18% from 2023, driven by NIL deals and creator-economy crossover. But the infrastructure remains pre-digital: agents still send PDF one-sheets, sponsors still cold-call team PR departments, and athletes still lose deals because contact information is wrong or outdated. One mid-market agent told us his firm spends 12 hours per week per associate just maintaining internal athlete databases — billable time that could go toward deal negotiation. If the startup captures even 10% of the talent-representation workflow, that's $3B in annual transaction value touching the platform, and a credible path to a $500M valuation at Series A.
The competitive landscape is thin. LinkedIn has athletes but no deal-status signals. Opendorse and INFLCR serve college NIL markets but lack pro-league depth. Sportradar owns data rights but not credentialing rails. The closest comp is actually *The Black Book*, the decades-old print directory for film and TV crew — used by 90% of Hollywood production offices despite being a literal spiral-bound book mailed twice a year. IMDb killed The Black Book by being free, searchable, and always current. The athlete version doesn't exist yet, which is why three private-equity shops are already asking about licensing the API for athlete-fund due diligence. Rodgers's involvement — he personally cold-emailed the founding team after a podcast interview — brings 38M Instagram followers and credibility with the 2,000+ active NFL players who will determine adoption velocity.
Watch for the official brand announcement in Q2 2025, likely timed to the NFL Draft when agent activity peaks. The company is hiring a head of partnerships from CAA or WME, expected to close by March. Early contract pilots with two major leagues — one North American, one European — are in legal review, targeting summer launch. If Rodgers recruits 10 marquee athletes to populate profiles publicly, the platform goes from concept to signal overnight. And if one $5M endorsement deal closes because a brand found an athlete through the database, the PR writes itself.
The takeaway
Rodgers-backed startup credentializes the **$30B** athlete-marketing layer; if it captures deal flow, Series A pricing starts at **$500M**.
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